I have played one round with my charts. Still no clinic yet, but my would be instructor is caddying on tour ATM. I will say that just reading your comments here as well as the ones on the AimPoint "green reading" section has helped me. My putting stats were not much better in the one round, but my misses were closer than ever. I like the tap in two putt better than the 8 footer I really learned that my speed needs mucho work. Nothing sucks like knowing the read was good, but the speed was off. Cannot wait until I can get to a clinic or get a lesson set up.

Thanks everyone.

@iacas - My club likes to keep the stimp at 11-11.5, and some of the pin locations are 5% and 6% slopes and one should be rounded up to a 7% (only used at Tourn time). I know that Mark says very few are over 4% but my club has them. How do I adjust for the added slope? Is there a formula, or is this question better asked over at AP.

I took the entry level class last week with Keith Handler (who looks a tad like Kenneth from 30 Rock). I thought it was pricey at first, but in retrospect, I got alot out of it and it was worth it. Although I'm a bit laser beam focused still on my full swing a la Stack and TIlt, there wasn't going to be a class in my area for awhile later, so I took advantage.

Walking the curve to me was the meat of the class, but Keith also gave me a couple of putting tips which really made my speed control and alignment better. I watched carefully during the walking the curve part and it really is a bit of science and art. Kind of like hunting when you track your prey.

Although I'm good at finding the zero lines when they are obvious, some greens I am clueless, especially some practice putting greens which feel flat. It's like there are more than 2 zero lines. The flat-ish (yes I know there are none) are devilish.

Anyways, I used the method on my last nine and scored two birdies. One birdie before Aimpoint I would have aimed the opposite way. Once I found the zero line, it was like, no way, it doesn't look like it'll turn this way, but I trusted it and it did.

Also, I just saw Michelle Wie 3-putt at the U.S. Women's Open, and one of the commentators (Dottie Pepper, I believe) said she was using "the AimPoint way of putting' and looked overly mechanical, which makes no sense because it's for green reading, not actually putting.

Also, I just saw Michelle Wie 3-putt at the U.S. Women's Open, and one of the commentators (Dottie Pepper, I believe) said she was using "the AimPoint way of putting' and looked overly mechanical, which makes no sense because it's for green reading, not actually putting.

Hmmm, I wonder what Pepper or whomever think of S&T. I saw Stacey Lewis putting, she uses Aimpoint I think, she looked fine to me.

Also, I just saw Michelle Wie 3-putt at the U.S. Women's Open, and one of the commentators (Dottie Pepper, I believe) said she was using "the AimPoint way of putting' and looked overly mechanical, which makes no sense because it's for green reading, not actually putting.

So dumb. And from as close as Michelle was, it was not a putt for which you really use AimPoint... seriously, it's under three feet.

Quote:

Originally Posted by BigTexGolfer

That's interesting, since Pepper said Lewis had the greens figured out better than anyone else in the field a couple of times. Maybe she got her and Wei confused on which one is using Aimpoint.

Wie just started learning AimPoint a few months ago. Lewis (see her caddie's hat) has been using AimPoint for a little over a year.

Any word on an "Aimpoint" book? I know of a putting book or two where the major contributors were certified Aimpoint, but is there a book or DVD in works? My impression is that a book or DVD may not approximate what one could learn at a Aimpoint class/lesson, but would provide a good introductory starting point.

Any word on an "Aimpoint" book? I know of a putting book or two where the major contributors were certified Aimpoint, but is there a book or DVD in works? My impression is that a book or DVD may not approximate what one could learn at a Aimpoint class/lesson, but would provide a good introductory starting point.

I don't think so. You really need to get out and see it first-hand, and I think a book or DVD would be counter-productive. People would think "they understand it" or "know it" and never actually learn it the right way.

If you took a class and did not get a "student workbook" or handout (I just mean something in addition to the AimChart), I have a PDF I can give you that has the basic stuff. Send me a PM with the details of when you took your school (date, from whom, where, and how long the class was should be sufficient).

The Rule of 8 (really "The Rule of 96 inches is pretty close to 100 inches" :-D) is good but I personally don't like it.

I really kind of see myself looking at it based on the slopes and saying "is this an average amount of slope? More? Less?" Then I go from there. You can also start to compare greens. If you make a good read on a 20 foot putt you can say "yep, that's a 2.5% slope" and then on the next hole just say "is it flatter or steeper than that last green?"

Slope is the "hardest" of the relatively easy pieces of AimPoint to "get," IMHO.

The Rule of 8 (really "The Rule of 96 inches is pretty close to 100 inches" :-D) is good but I personally don't like it.

I really kind of see myself looking at it based on the slopes and saying "is this an average amount of slope? More? Less?" Then I go from there. You can also start to compare greens. If you make a good read on a 20 foot putt you can say "yep, that's a 2.5% slope" and then on the next hole just say "is it flatter or steeper than that last green?"

Slope is the "hardest" of the relatively easy pieces of AimPoint to "get," IMHO.

The slope was probably one of the easiest parts for me to get just using my feet. I've gotten pretty good at feeling (and seeing, to some degree) a 1%, 2%, etc., slope.

I think that the 20 second reading speed is very achievable. Then you line up and putt. I have been doing research for the past few days and have e-mailed an AimPoint instructor inquiring about classes. He must be on vacation because I have had no reply yet. But the You Tube AimPoint introductory clips has been very helpful. For instance, You Tube showed me how to find the zero line (where the point of the straight putt is on both sides of the hole). The only problem I had was finding it without stepping on someone's line. When I found it, I applied some AimPoint concepts and it helped me determine breaks easier on difficult greens. So I want a formal lesson to fill in the gaps for me. I think they test you to make sure you can make the read in 20 seconds. In my You Tube research, I kept hearing about how taking more than 20 seconds was taking too long. So they teach you AimPoint methods to find the zero line and then make the read. All I've heard from former students is "The best money ever spent on golf." I have heard no negatives except that the instructors/clinics may not be near you. Good Luck.